Sunday, September 16, 2012


Will Our Accelerated Instruction Plan Prepare Students Retaking the STAAR Test to Meet the Standard?

            Last year the STAAR test was first administered in a manner in which it affected student advancement toward meeting graduation requirements.  In our district we have opened a brand new high school campus this fall consisting of freshmen and sophomore students.  The sophomore class is made up mostly of students who attended one of the other two high schools in our district as freshmen.  This summer, our district curriculum and instruction department identified students who had not met the standard on one of the core subject STAAR tests taken as freshmen.  This data was provided to us at the beginning of the school year and we were charged with utilizing district resources and funds to provide the needed remediation to prepare these students to be successful when they retake the test this year.  Data was collected using STAAR assessment results.  Since this is a new project being conducted currently, I do not yet have the disaggregated data, but I do know that we have 175 students who will be retaking a STAAR exam this year.  Upon identifying these students, our group set the goal of having all of them meet the standard this year when they retake the assessment.  Our vision when establishing this program is to provide students the resources necessary to facilitate their success in meeting the standard for coursework they completed the previous year without detracting from the instruction they are receiving in the current year.  The communication of our vision is currently being disseminated to our parents, students, and community members because we have just recently formulated the plan.  When details are worked out, we will be notifying students, parents, and staff via email, phone, and website advertisement.  This will be the most efficient way to get the information out to as many people as possible, as quickly as possible.  The management of the project will be shared fairly equally among many members of our team.  As a science department chair, I will be responsible for coordinating and staffing the efforts of our program as they pertain to science, while other department chairs will do the same for their subject areas.  Securing of facilities, handling finances, and controlling personnel issues will be handled by campus principals and administrators from the office of curriculum and instruction.  We are still in the forming phase of determining specific responsibilities for the operations within the program.  Part of our ongoing needs assessment will be identifying individual needs for the students we are serving by identifying specific areas of deficiency within their content areas.  We will then have teachers in each area to help address those needs as identified in the assessment.  In order to formulate our project, each of the three high school campuses was tasked with designing a program to assist students who had not met the acceptable standard on the STAAR test.  Campus principals returned to district leadership with the plans from each campus and the decision was made to go with the proposal from our campus.  Our program will serve students from all walks of life and with varying individual needs.  We have several students with Limited English Proficiency, students with varying special needs, and students from many different socioeconomic classes.  We will be able to provide differentiated instruction based on individual needs to help these students to be successful when they retake the STAAR exam.
I have accepted a position at a new high school this year, and as a result, my action research project has been changed.  Instead of my research on the effect of school uniforms, I am now conducting action research on an Accelerated Instruction Plan to take place over the next few months in an effort to prepare students who are retaking the STAAR exam to meet the standard.  My next post will include my progress report of this research.
 

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Updated Action Research Plan


Action Planning Template
Goal: The goal of my action research is to discover any correlation between implementing school uniforms and increasing student academic achievement with a corresponding decrease in discipline referrals in my school district.
Action Steps(s):
Person(s) Responsible:
Timeline: Start/End
Needed Resources
Evaluation
1. Reach out to neighboring school districts that currently utilize school uniforms in high schools and compile information on challenges and struggles within the policy.
Myself, other schools
February 2012-April 2012


2. Identify schools in the district that currently require school uniforms and the dates of implementation.







Myself
February 2012-April 2012
Campus policies for individual campuses within the school district.
Upon gathering all campus information, a list will be compiled of all campus and their policy regarding school uniforms.
3. Review TAKS data for each individual campus utilizing school uniforms within the school district.







Myself
February 2012 –August 2012
TAKS Data for student achievement broken down by campus.
An analysis will be completed illustrating student achievement trends spanning an appropriate number of years based on date of implementation of school uniforms.
4. Review TAKS data for each individual campus not utilizing school uniforms within the school district.







Myself
February 2012 – August 2012
TAKS Data for student achievement broken down by campus.
An analysis will be completed illustrating student achievement trends spanning an appropriate number of years relative to the time period used in the previous step.
5. Evaluate TAKS data from steps 2 and 3 broken down by subpopulations for individual campuses with and without school uniforms.








Myself
February 2012 – September 2012
TAKS data for each campus broken down by subpopulation.
Conclusions drawn from this data will be merged with previous data derived from the campus reports for achievement campus wide.
6. Evaluate student discipline referrals per year for each campus within the specified timeframe involving implementation of school uniforms.
Myself, Site Supervisor, Records Clerk
February 2012 – December 2012
Discipline reports from individual campuses within the specified timeframe.
Data trends will be included in the running report on the research project.
7. Comparative analysis of data from campuses requiring school uniforms with those that do not.  Data will include student academic achievement, TEA campus ratings, and student discipline data.
Myself
August 2012 – December 2012
All gathered data from the Action Research Project.
Final report will analyze trends in student academic success and student discipline within the two comparative groups drawing conclusions from existing correlations.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Action Research Plan


Action Research Plan
Goal: The goal of my action research is to discover any correlation between implementing school uniforms and increasing student academic achievement with a corresponding decrease in discipline referrals in my school district.
Action Steps(s):
Person(s) Responsible:
Timeline: Start/End
Needed Resources
Evaluation
1. Identify schools in the district that currently require school uniforms and the dates of implementation.







Myself
February 2012-March 2012
Campus policies for individual campuses within the school district.
Upon gathering all campus information, a list will be compiled of all campus and their policy regarding school uniforms.
2. Review TAKS data for each individual campus utilizing school uniforms within the school district.







Myself
February 2012 –August 2012
TAKS Data for student achievement broken down by campus.
An analysis will be completed illustrating student achievement trends spanning an appropriate number of years based on date of implementation of school uniforms.
3. Review TAKS data for each individual campus not utilizing school uniforms within the school district.







Myself
February 2012 – August 2012
TAKS Data for student achievement broken down by campus.
An analysis will be completed illustrating student achievement trends spanning an appropriate number of years relative to the time period used in the previous step.
4. Evaluate TAKS data from steps 2 and 3 broken down by subpopulations for individual campuses with and without school uniforms.








Myself
February 2012 – August 2012
TAKS data for each campus broken down by subpopulation.
Conclusions drawn from this data will be merged with previous data derived from the campus reports for achievement campus wide.
5. Evaluate student discipline referrals per year for each campus within the specified timeframe involving implementation of school uniforms.
Myself, Site Supervisor, Records Clerk
February 2012 – August 2012
Discipline reports from individual campuses within the specified timeframe.
Data trends will be included in the running report on the research project.
6. Comparative analysis of data from campuses requiring school uniforms with those that do not.  Data will include student academic achievement, TEA campus ratings, and student discipline data.
Myself
August 2012 – September 2012
All gathered data from the Action Research Project.
Final report will analyze trends in student academic success and student discipline within the two comparative groups drawing conclusions from existing correlations.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Deeper into the Action...

After spending a good deal of time in the reading about action research, it is beginning to seem more and more applicable in the administrator setting.  The most helpful section of reading was the section that mentioned the nine areas for action research as a principal.  This section provided very solid rationale behind the decision to use action researcrh across each of the nine areas, and provided real world examples of conducting action research in each of those areas.  This provided a valuable and helpful framework of the correct utilization of action research, and I was able to select an action research topic that I believe will yield very enlightening results.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Why Blogs?


Blogs are an effective instrument in publishing information for access to a broad audience.  In this light, they are an effective tool in providing a vehicle for administrators to participate in action research amongst a global community.


Thoughts on Action Research


The concept of action research does not necessarily seem new in its nature, however, its utilization in education has been rather innovative.  I for one would be the first to support a process in which the primary source and subject of the research is myself, as opposed to an “expert” panel of outsiders who haven’t been in a classroom for the better part of a decade.  That is not to say that the work of external educational researchers is not valuable, but in order to improve instruction and student achievement, the onus for reflection falls squarely on those individuals who are operating on the front lines.  The implementation of action research in education is an incredibly productive method of professional growth for teachers and administrators alike.  Though the specific practices being evaluated may differ between teachers and administrators, the model for continuous improvement across these disciplines, as well as the results, are consistent.  Action research is a process I have been involved in for the last several years, without fully being aware of it.  Professional Learning Communities, or PLCs, are a widely implemented vehicle for action research in school districts across the country.  These collaborative groups of teachers allow for reflection of best practices in teaching and finding correlations between teaching practices and student achievement.  The implementation of PLCs allows for action research to be conducted on a daily basis.  I look forward to increasing my understanding of the role of action research for school administrators in the months ahead.